-Caveat Lector-

http://www.latimes.com/news/comment/19991110/t000102298.html

Wednesday, November 10, 1999



                                             Pacific Rim Renders Its Verdict on
Clinton

                                               * His ineptness with Congress on

                                             foreign policy makes a GOP
president in
                                             control of his own party look
attractive.

                                             By TOM PLATE


                                                  SAN DIEGO--William Jefferson
                                             Clinton has been the
presider-in-chief
                                             over a fabled economy, the
                                             politician-in-chief who became the
first
                                             incumbent Democratic president to
be
                                             reelected by the American people
since
                                             FDR. However, for those who care
                                             about foreign policy, his
departure from
                                             the White House, still more than a
year
                                             away, cannot, alas, come soon
enough.
                                                  It's sad, really. In the
corridors of last
                                             weekend's fifth annual retreat in
San
                                             Diego of the relatively new
Pacific
                                             Council on International
Policy--the
                                             West Coast answer to the
prestigious
                                             Council on Foreign Relations in
New
                                             York--there was much despair over
                                             what a tremendous foreign policy
                                             president Clinton might have been,
had
                                             he only tried harder.
                                                  From professor to business
                                             entrepreneur, from idealistic
nonprofit
                                             leader to Machiavellian political
                                             consultant, the informal verdict
                                             emerged, not unanimously, but with
the
                                             sense of a majority view:
Clinton's
                                             foreign policy on the whole has
been
                                             less coherent than
catch-as-catch-can,
                                             and at the end of the day it adds
up to a
                                             policy vision less worthy than the

                                             foreign policies of his two
Republican
                                             predecessors.
                                                  In fact, it was difficult in
San Diego,
                                             among the 200 or so retreaters, to
find
                                             many Democrats, much less
                                             Republicans or independents, who'd
go
                                             to bat for Clinton's style and
approach.
                                             Where was the engaged foreign
policy
                                             president who'd till the domestic
soil to
                                             suppress the weeds of
isolationism?
                                             Where was our explainer-in-chief
to
                                             publicly unravel the complexities
of
                                             globalization to encourage public
                                             understanding, for instance, of
the idea
                                             that U.S. businesses wanting to
deal
                                             with China aren't automatically
                                             communist dupes or amoral
                                             mercantilists? Where-oh-where was
                                             America's battler-in-chief who'd
duke it
                                             out for a principle, a treaty or a
vision
                                             he believed in, even if it meant
Capitol
                                             Hill wrestling, extreme style?
                                                  Of course, each member of the
Pacific
                                             Council speaks only for himself or

                                             herself: The organization lives by
a
                                             no-endorsement policy, and only
rarely
                                             does it take a group stand. Even
so,
                                             there was a lot of resignation, if
not
                                             anger, about Clinton. Many fumed
over
                                             the administration's tactic (later

                                             abandoned) of labeling anyone
                                             opposing its advocacy of the
                                             Antiballistic Missile Treaty as an
idiot
                                             isolationist. Even members who
agreed
                                             with the administration on the
                                             substance of the issue condemned
the
                                             ploy, viewing it as unworthy of a
                                             president's foreign policy, just
as they
                                             believed that the Republican
red-baiting
                                             months ago on the Chinese spy
issue
                                             was moronic and dangerous.
                                                  In California, China matters.

                                             Members expressed frustration that
at
                                             this late date, virtually on the
eve of the
                                             annual World Trade Organization
heads
                                             of state meeting in Seattle,
Clinton
                                             officials are still scrambling to
work out
                                             a semblance of a deal to have
China
                                             admitted to the WTO. That's the
deal we
                                             could have had in April when
Beijing
                                             laid many negotiating concessions
on
                                             the White House table, but Clinton

                                             flinched from the necessary fight
with
                                             Congress that loomed if he had
said yes.

                                                  Although the blunder may
still be
                                             corrected in a Seattle scramble,
it
                                             seemed all too typical of an
                                             administration whose attention
span on
                                             the larger world issues rises and
falls
                                             with the bellowing headlines of
the
                                             news media and the swinging mood
of
                                             public opinion.
                                                  It's not all the president's
fault, of
                                             course. It takes partisanship to
have a
                                             partisan fight. And so if there
was one
                                             overwhelming emotion in San Diego,
to
                                             which almost all delegates would
                                             unreservedly agree, it was the
hope that
                                             the next president, whoever the
lucky
                                             person might be, will somehow be
able
                                             to elevate the foreign policy
debate and
                                             bring the American people closer
to a
                                             consensus on big issues. Some
members
                                             even wondered out loud whether
that
                                             might have a better chance of
happening
                                             if the United States were to elect
a
                                             Republican as the next president,
if only
                                             because that might neutralize the
worst
                                             tendencies of the Republican
Congress
                                             presumably to be re-installed next
year.
                                                  Might only a strong
Republican
                                             remove from Congress divisive
foreign
                                             policy partisanship in a way that
might
                                             elude a Democrat, as it tragically
has
                                             Bill Clinton? That was the
question
                                             haunting San Diego.
                                                             - - -

                                             Times Contributing Editor Tom
Plate, a
                                             Pacific Council Member, Teaches at

                                             Ucla. E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]


                                             Copyright 1999 Los Angeles Times

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